Detergent composition

ABSTRACT

THE COMPOUNDS, DODECYL GLYCERYL SULFOXIDE, DODECYLOXYETHYL METHYL SULFOXIDE, DODECYL ACETONYL SULFOXIDE, DODECYL 2-CHLOROETHYL SULFOXIDE, DODECYL 2-HYDROXYETHYL SULFOXIDE, DODECYLOXYETHOXYETHYL METHYL SULFOXIDE, DODECYL 5-IODOETHYL SULFOXIDE, DODECYL 2-MERCAPTOMETHYL ETHYL SULFOXIDE, DODECYL 2-(2=HYDROXY) ETHOXYETHYL SULFOXETHYL DODECYL 2-METHOXYETHYL SULFOXIDE, DODECYL 2-ETHOXYETHYL SULFOXIDE, DODECYL 2-ALLYLOXYETHYL SULFOXIDE, DODECYL ACETONYL SULFIDE, DODECYLOXYETHYL METHYL SULFIDE, DODECYLOXYETHOXYETHYL METHYL SULFIDE, AND DODECYLOXYETHOXYETHL CHLORIDE AREDISCLOSED AS SUDS-STABILIZER ADDITIVES OR INTERMEDIATES THEREFOR.

"United States Patent 3,796,759 DETERGENT COMPOSITION Hill M. Priestley, North Bergen, and James H. Wilson, Demarest, N.J., assignors to Lever Brothers Company, New York, N.Y.

No Drawing. Continuation-impart of application Ser. No. 365,487, May 6, 1964, which is a continuation-in-part of applications Ser. No. 725,505, Apr. 1, 1958, and Ser. No. 60,546, Oct. 5, 1960, all now abandoned. This application Aug. 25, 1969, Ser. No. 869,985

Int. Cl. C07c 147/14 US. Cl. 260-607 A 10 Claims ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE 3,796,759 Patented Mar. 12, 1974 ice inorganic builder salts. It is also stated in the patent that other synthetic detergents may be employed as detergency supplements in combination with the sulfoxides and that foam'stabilizers may be added.

It is common practice in the industry to include foam stabilizers in detergent compositions to improve the persistence and stability of the foam produced by agitation of the washing solution containing the detergent composition. These foam stabilizers are particularly useful in detergent compositions based upon organic non-soap synthetic detcrgent compound.

In accordance with the present invention, novel compounds are provided from the group consisting of dodecyl glyceryl sulfoxide, dodecyloxyethyl methyl sulfoxide, dodecyl acetonyl sulfoxide, dodecyl 2-chloroethyl sulfoxide, dodecyl 2-hydroxyethyl sulfoxide, dodecyloxyethoxyethyl methyl sulfoxide, dodecyl 2-iodoethyl sulfoxide, dodecyl Z-mercaptomethylethyl sulfoxide, dodecyl 2-(2-hydroxy) ethoxyethyl sulfoxide, dodecyl 2-methoxyethyl sulfoxide, dodecyl 2-ethoxyethyl sulfoxide, dodecyl 2-allyloxyethyl sulfoxide, dodecyl acetonyl sulfide, dodecyloxyethyl meth yl sulfide, dodecyloxyethoxyethyl methyl sulfide, and dodecyloxyethoxyethyl chloride.

The specific compounds of this invention are:

Dodecyl-2-(2-hydroxy)ethoxyethyl sulfoxide.

012112 80 OH2CH2OCH2CHZOH Dodecyl 2-methoxyethyl sulioxide 012112580 CH2CH2O CH Dodecyl 2-ethoxyethyl sulioxide 012112580 CHgCHzO CzHs Dodecyl Z-allyloxyethyl sulfomde- O12H25s0 CHzCHaO CHzCH=CHz Dodecyl acetonyl sulfide 012E258 CHzCOCHa Dodecyloxyethyl methyl sulfide Dodecyloxyethoxyethyl methyl sulfide Dodecyloxyethoxyethyl chloride 012E2 0 CHzCHzO CHzCHzCl The present invention relates to novel dialkyl monosulfoxides and related compounds which are useful either as detergents and foam stabilizers or as intermediates in the preparation of compounds which are useful as detergents and foam stabilizers.

This application is a continuation-in-part of our copending application, Ser. No. 365,487, filed May 6, 1964, which in turn was a continuation-in-part of our applications, Ser. Nos. 725,505, filed Apr. 1, 1958, and 60,546, filed Oct. 5, 1960, all now abandoned.

Alkyl sulfoxides having a long chain fatty acid residue are known to have surface active properties. US. Pat. No. 2,787,595 to Webb discloses the use of alkyl sulfoxides as the essential active ingredient in detergent compositions.

According to Webb, the sulfoxides may be employed per A further preferred class within the above described sulfoxides include dodecyl glyceryl sulfoxide,

C H SOCH CHOHCH OH dodecyloxyethyl methyl sulfoxide,

C H OCH C'H SOCH and dodecyloxyethoxyethyl methyl sulfoxide,

C H OCI-I C'H OCH CH SOCH These materials are exceptionally suitable in the presence of household bleach.

Another preferred class within the broad class described above are dodecyl 2-chloroethyl sulfoxide,

and dodecyl 2-iodoethyl sulfoxide, C H SOCH CH I. These compounds are useful as intermediates in the preparation of a wide variety of other sulfoxides having the aforementioned desired properties.

It has been found that the presence of small amounts of the sulfoxides described above improve the stability of the foam produced by agitating aqueous solutions of 4 Both sulfides and the dodecyloxyethoxyethyl chloride, C1gH25oCHzCH2OCH2CH3Cl, are novel.

The dodecyl Z-chloroethyl sulfoxide was prepared by oxidation of the known dodecyl Z-chloroethyl sulfide with sodium hypochlorite and with nitric acid:

5 suds-produc ng mater1als selected from the group COIlSlS t- C12H25SCH2CH2C1+2HN03 mg of al'llOl'llC, ampholytrc and nomomc organlc synthetic SOCH CH Cl+2NO +H O detergents. Certain of the sulfoxides, as well as the sulfides and h1 -id are usef l i preparing known or novel Since this sulfoxide is also a halide, 1t can enter mto sulfoxides which are in turn useful as detergents and suds F Wlth sodlum mFTCaPtIdBS and alcoholates, boosters yield new compounds WhlCh already contaln a sulfoxide The following table lists the novel compounds of this group: invention together with their formula, their melting point C H SOCH CH Cl+NaSCH and the melting point of the corresponding sulfone. =C H SOCH CH SHC +NaCl TABLE I Meltln Compound Melting point 0 point, sulfone, Number Name Formula 0. C.

83 93 2.. Dodecyloxyethyl methyl sulfo de--- C12H250CH2CH2SOCH3 43 66 3.- Dodecyl aeetonyl sul mi CnHzsSOCHzCOCHa 84 81 4.- Dodecyl 2-ehloroethyl sulfoxide C11H5SOCH=CHO1 75 62 5.. Dodecyl 2-hydroxyethyl sulfoxide CnHzsSOCHzCHaOH 71 6.. Dodeeyloxyethoxyethyl methyl sulfoxide 012E250CHgOHQOCHgCHgSOCH; 43 44 7-- Dodecyl 2-iod0ethy1 sulfoxide C1zH25SOCH2CHzI 74 100 8.. Dodecyl 2-rnerea tomethylethyl sulioxide---. CHHMSOCHZCHZSCHa 68 1 71 9.. Dodeeyl-2-(2-l1y oxy)ethoxyethylsu1foxlde CnHnSOCHzCHzOCHzCHzOH 54 60 10. Dodecyl Z-methoxyethyl sulfoxi CHHHSOCHZCHflOCHa 58 48 11- Dodecyl 2-ethoxyethyl sulfoxide CizHzsSOCHzCHzOCnHs 57 47 12 Dodecyl 2-allyloxyethyl sulfoxi CmHnSOCHzCHzO CHzCH=CHs 54 46 Boiling point, C.

13. r Dodecyl aeetonyl sul fi CuHasSCHaGOCHa 150-160/L0 mm. 14. Dodeeyloxyethyl methyl su CmHzsOCHaCHqSCHa 140/1. 0 mm. Dodecyloxyethoxyethyl methyl sulfide CnHasO CHzCHaOCHzCErSCH; 155/1. 5 mm. Dodecyloxyethoxyethyl chloride Cl2H25OCH2CHIOCH2ChCl 150/1.5 mm.

1 Melting point of disulfone, 171 0.

Of the 12 sulfoxides listed in Table I, Nos. 1, 2, 3, 5 and 6 were prepared by the oxidation of the corresponding sulfides with concentrated nitric acid or with hydrogen peroxide in accordance with the following:

The sulfides, in turn, had been obtained by warming an alcoholic solution of the sodium mercaptide with a halide:

Thus, sodium dodecyl mercaptide when treated with glycerol alphamonochlorohydrin, gave dodecyl thioglyceryl ether; with chloroacetone, dodecyl acetonyl sulfide; and with ethylene chlorohydrin, dodecyl 2-hydroxyethyl sulfide:

CH2CH2OC 2H 5 C I-I SOCH CH Cl+NaOCH CH OH '=C H SOCH CH OCH CH OH+NaCl C H SOCH CH Cl+NaOCH =C H SOCH CH OCH C H SOCH CH C1+NaOC H -=C 'H SOCH CH OC H +NaCl =C H SOCH CH=CH +NaCl In this manner, there was prepared, reading the right hand formulas above from top to bottom: dodecyl 2- mercaptomethylethyl sulfoxide, dodecyl 2-(2-hydroxy) ethoxyethyl sulfoxide, dodecyl 2-methoxyethyl sulfoxide,

dodecyl 2-ethoxyethy1 sulfoxide, and dodecyl Z-allyloxyethyl sulfoxide.

For the preparation of the known dodecyl vinyl sulfoxide, C H SOCH=CH by a new procedure, i.e. by removal of hydrohalide from dodecyl 2-haloethyl sulfoxlde-C 2112 S O 0 C H a more reactive halide was desired. This was achieved by refluxing dodecyl 2-chloroethyl sulfoxide with sodium iodide in acetone solution, whereby dodecyl 2-iodoethyl sulfoxide was formed:

The iodosulfoxide can, of course, be used in place of the dodecyl 2-chloroethyl sulfoxide in reactions with sodium mercaptides and alcoholates. The time required for the completion of such reactions is greatly lessened.

Thus, of the listed sulfoxides, roughly a half were prepared by first forming the sulfide from the sodium mercaptide and halide, and oxidizing this to the sulfoxide.

The other half were obtained by the reaction of a halosulfoxide with a sodium mercaptide or alcoholate. In the latter case, no oxidation was necessary. The new intermediates (nonsulfoxides) are:

Dodecyl acetonyl sulfide, C H SCH COCH To a mixture of 101 g. dodecyl mercaptan and 300 ml. 3A alcohol, there was added, with stirring, a solution of 22 g. sodium hydroxide in ml. of distilled water. The sodium mercaptide solution was then treated with 51 g. chloroacetone, a few grams at a time, with cooling and stirring. The mixture was allowed to stand at room temperature for half an hour, and then poured into two liters of water. The oil was extracted with 400 ml. ether, the ether solution washed with water, and dried over anhydrous sodium sulfate. The solvent was distilled ofl, and the residue fractionated. The yield of dodecyl acetonyl sulfide was 86 g. (67% of the theory), B.P. 155-160 C./1.0 mm. (bath temp. 195 C.) The phenylhydrazone derivative melted at 43 C; the oxime was an oil; and the semicarbazone melted at 81 C.

Dodecyl acetonyl sulfoxide, C H SOOH COCH A solution of 5.0 grams dodecyl acetonyl sulfide in 30 m1. acetone was treated with 1.75 ml. of 30% hydrogen peroxide. The solution was refluxed for 15 minutes on a water bath kept at 60 C. The reaction mixture was freed of the sol-vent by vacuum evaporation with a water pump on a water bath at C. The solid residue was triturated with ml. Skellysolve B in a mortar and filtered by suction. The material on the filter was washed with 10 ml. light petroleum ether. The yield of the sulfoxide was 4.1 grams, 75% of theory, and it had a melting point of 84 C. One gram, after recrystallization from 40 ml. Skellysolve B, yielded 0.85 gram of a product having a melting point of 84 C.; phenylhydrazone, melting point 73 C.

The ketosulfoxide is soluble in aqueous sodium hydroxide solution, in which it foams exceedingly. On acidification, the ketosulfoxide is recovered unchanged. Dodecyl .acetonyl sulfoxide is much more stable in strong alkali than is the corresponding ketosulfone. Thus, the ketosulfoxide is recovered unchanged by refluxing it in 10% sodium hydroxide for 4 hours. A solution of dodecyl acetonyl sulfoxide in 10% aqueous sodium hydroxide was kept unchanged in the 52 C. oven for two weeks.

EXAMPLE 2 As was mentioned above, it was in the course of the preparation of the known dodecyl vinyl sulfoxide by a new route, that the following three new sulfoxides were obtained:

Dodecyl Z-hydroxyethyl sulfoxide, C H SOCH CH OH Dodecyl 2-chloroethyl sulfoxide, C H SOCH CH Cl Dodecyl 2-iodoethy1 sulfoxide, C H SOCH CH I The reactions involved are as follows:

Dodecyl 2-hydroxyethyl sulfide, C H SCH CH OH Metallic sodium, 23 g., was dissolved in 410 ml. 3A, alcohol, and to this was added 78 g. of Z-mercaptoethanol, HSCH CH OH. There was then introduced 249 g. dodecyl bromide, dropwise, with stirring. 'I-Ieat was evolved. The mixture was refluxed for half an hour. Analysis showed that no mercaptide was present and that this time interval had been suflicient for completion of the reaction. The product was extracted with 500 ml. ether, the ethereal solution washed 5 times with water, and dried (sodium sulfate). The ether was removed, and the residue 'vacuum distilled, with steam passing trough the condenser jacket. There was obtained 229 g. of dodecyl 2-hydroxyethyl sulfide, B.P. 177 C./2.5 mm. (oil bath temp. 220 C.).

Dodecyl 2-chloroethyl sulfide, C H SCH OH Cl Thionyl chloride, 128 ml. was added, with cooling and stirring, to a mixture of 70 ml. pyridine and 228 g. dodecyl 2-hydroxyethyl sulfide. At first, the addition was slow, being guided by the amount of heat evolved. Later, as the heat of reaction declined, the addition was more rapid. The mixture was then heated, with stirring, at 120 C. for 1.5 hours. Excess thionyl chloride was decomposed by the addition of ml. water at 60 C. The product was extracted with 500 ml. ether, washed with water, and

dried overnight with anhydrous sodium sulfate. After removal of the ether on the water bath, the residue was heated on an oil bath under the vacuum of a water pump. The intermediate chlorosulfinate, C H SOH CH OSOCl, is quite stable, and was heated at 200 C. under reduced pressure to drive out all of the sulfur dioxide, leaving behind the dodecyl 2-chloroethyl sulfide. This was fractionated, giving 149 g., B.P. 172 C./2.0 mm. (bath temp. 222 C.

Dodecyl 2-chloroethyl sulfoxide, C -H SOCH CH El Dodecyl 2-chloroethyl sulfide, 50 g. was added in small portions, with cooling and stirring to 80 ml. concentrated nitric acid. The product was poured into 800 ml. water. Filtration was slow, hence the suspension was centrifuged. The supernatant liquid was decanted, the residuel product stirred up with water in the centrifuge tubes, and recentrifuged. This was repeated, using as a wash 50% 3A alcohol. The solid was finally filtered on a Buchner funnel, and dried. The yield of dodecyl 2-chloroethyl sulfoxide was 48 g., M.P. 75 C.

Dodecyl-Z-chloroethyl sulfone, C H SO CH CI-I Cl The sulfone derivatives had been prepared from the sulfide by treatment with excess hydrogen peroxide in glacial acetic acid. The mixture was ether refluxed for one or two hours, or allowed to stand at room temperature for 48 hours. As an example, the preparation of dodecyl 2-chloroethyl sulfone is described. Dodecyl 2-chloroethyl sulfide, 10 g., was mixed with 100 ml. acetic acid and 40 ml. of 30% hydrogen peroxide. The sulfide had not all dissolved, and an oil was present. The mixture was refluxed for 1.5 hours. Initially, the oil was still present at reflux temperature, but afterwards, a homo-' geneous solution was obtained. On cooling the solution, the sulfone crystallized out. It was filtered, washed with 10 ml. glacial acetic acid and then with 4 ml. distilled water. The yield of dry dodecyl 2-chloroethyl sulfone was 8.4 g., M.P. 62 C.

Dodecyl 2-iodoethyl sulfoxide, C H SOCH CH 'I A mixture of 40 g. dodecyl 2-chloroethyl sulfoxide (this sample had been freed of traces of nitric acid by washing with bicarbonate solution to alkalinity), 45 g. sodium iodide, and 30 ml. acetone was refluxed for 5 hours. The acetone solution was decanted from the sodium chloride, and the salt rinsed with a little acetone.

The combined acetone solution was refluxed for an additional 7 hours. Most of the acetone was evaporated. The residue was treated with water, filtered, and the moist solid was recrystallized from 200 ml. 3A alcohol. There was obtained 28.4 g. of dodecyl 2-iodoethyl sulfoxide, M.P. 74 C.

Dodecyl vinyl sulfoxide, C H SOCH=CH A suspension of 5.0 g. dodecyl 2-iodoethyl sulfoxide in 25 ml. sodium hydroxide was heated at 80 C., with stirring, for two hours. The mixture was poured into 300 ml. ice water. After an hour, the solid was filtered, washed with water, and dried. The yield of dodecyl vinyl sulfoxide was 3.2 g., M.P. 42 C.

Dodecyl Z-hydroxyethyl sulfoxide, C H SOCH OH OH Dodecyl Z-hydroxyethyl sulfide, 9.0 g., was gradually added to 10 ml. concentrated nitric acid, with cooling and stirring. Ice water was introduced, and the suspension was extracted with 100 ml. chloroform. This was washed with water, then with sodium bicarbonate solution, and again with water. The chloroform solution was dried with sodium sulfate. Evaporation of the solvent left behind 9.2 g. solid, which was recrystallized from 70 ml. Skellysolve B. The yield of dodecyl 2-hydroxyethyl sulfoxide was 7.8 g., M.P. 71 C.

Dodecyl 2-mercaptomethylethyl sulfoxide, C H SOCH CH SCH Metallic sodium, 1.15 g., was dissolved in 50 ml. ethyl alcohol, and to the cooled solution was added 4 ml. of condensed methanethiol, CH SH, and 14.0 g. dodecyl 2-chloroethyl sulfoxide. The suspension was heated on the water bath at 60 C. for minutes. A test sample, titrated with standard acid (phenolphthalein) showed that the reaction was complete. The reaction product was poured into 500 ml. water, the solid filtered, and dried. The yield of dodecyl 2-mercaptomethylethyl sulfoxide was 14.4 g., M.P. 67 C. The product was halogen-free. One gram 'was recrystallized from 4 ml. ethyl alcohol, giving 0.8 g., M.P. 68 C.

Dodecyl 2-ethoxyethyl sulfoxide, C H SOCH CH OC H When the above reaction was repeated, except that the methanethiol was omitted, there was obtained dodecyl 2-ethoxyethyl sulfoxide, M.P. 58 C. Similarly, dodecyl 2-methoxyethyl sulfoxide was obtained when the solvent was methanol, and dodecyl 2-allyloxyethyl sulfoxide, when the solvent was allyl alcohol.

Dodecyl 2-(2-hydroxy)ethoxyethy1 sulfoxide, C H SOCH CH OCH CH OH Metallic sodium, 0.23 g., was dissolved in 10 m1. ethylene glycol, and to this was added 1.0 g. dodecyl 2-chloroethyl sulfoxide. The mixture was heated at 80 C. for 15 minutes. A homogeneous solution resulted. This was poured into 60 ml. cold water. The solid was extracted with 100 ml. ether, the ether solution was washed with water, dried with sodium sulfate, and the ether distilled. There was obtained 0.7 g. dodecyl-2-(2-hydroxy) ethoxyethyl sulfoxide, M.P. 54 C. 7

EXAMPLE 3 Dodecyl glyceryl sulfoxide, Compound No. 1 in the table was prepared from dodecyl thioglyceryl ether, C H SCH CHOHCH OH. The latter compound was in turn prepared according to a modification of the teachings of U.S. Pat. No. 1,987,526. To a solution of 5.2 grams metallic sodium in 130 ml. of ethyl alcohol, 95%, there was added 45 grams dodecyl mercaptan followed by 24.6 grams glyceryl alpha-monochlorohydrin. The mixture was refluxed for one hour on a water bath, and then poured into water. The product was extracted with 400 ml. of diethyl ether, washed with a sodium chloride solution and dried over a hydrous sodium sulfate. The ether A mixture of 421 g. l-dodecene (2.5 moles), 300 g. of commercial alpha-thioglycerol, assay (2.5 moles), and 1.26 g. alpha, alpha-azodi-isobutyronitrile was heated on the water bath at 90 C., with stirring. After 20 minutes, the temperature rose to 125 C. The water bath was removed, and the reaction mixture was allowed to cool to 70 C. It was then poured, with stirring, into 4 liters of n-hexane. A complete solution resulted. The mixture was cooled in ice, the solid filtered off, and washed with 200 ml. cold n-hexane. The yield of dodecyl thioglyceryl ether, M.P. 51 C., was 450 g. (65% of the theory).

Dodecyl glyceryl sulfoxide (A) Powdered dodecyl thioglyceryl ether, 5.0 g., was slowly added at room temperature to 25 ml. of concentrated nitric acid. This was treated with ice water, the solid filtered, washed with water, and dried. The yield of dodecyl glyceryl sulfoxide was 5.2 g., M.P. 83 C.

Dodecyl glyceryl sulfoxide (B) To a solution of g. of dodecyl thioglyceryl ether in 600 ml. acetone there was slowly added, with cooling and stirring, 50 ml. of 30% hydrogen peroxide. A homogeneous solution was obtained. This was allowed to stand at room temperature for 24 hours. The precipitate which had formed was washed with a mixture of 60 ml. acetone and 5 ml. water. The yield was 50 g., M.P. 85 C. The filtrate and washings were set aside for another 24 hours, when 26 grams of the sulfoxide were deposited, M.P. 80 C., making a total of 76 grams of dodecyl glyceryl sulfoxide.

'Dodecyloxyethyl methyl sulfoxide, Compound No. 2 of the table, was prepared as follows: First, the monododecyl ether of ethylene glycol was formed:

The starting product represents a dodecyl alcohol+1 mole ethylene oxide adduct. That is, by passing in one mole of ethylene oxide into one of dodecyl alcohol, the same product should theoretically be formed as from the reation of dodecyl bromide and sodium glycol. Actually, a complex mixture is the result, with some unchanged lauryl alcohol, and considerable amounts of the lauryl alcohol-2 mole ethylene oxide adduct. Still, for the preparation of a bleach-stable suds booster, the

adduct would be satisfactory. The hydroxyl group was then replaced with a halogen; and this in turn replaced by a methylmercapto group; and the product was finally oxidized with nitric acid:

=C H OCH CH Cl+SO HCl C H OCH CH Cl+NaSCH C12H25OCH2CH2SCH3 C H OCH CH SCH +2HNO For the preparation of the monododecyl ether of ethylene glycol, 10.5 g. of metallic sodium was dissolved, a little at a time, in 250 g. of hot ethylene glycol. There was then added 100 g. of dodecyl bromide. The mixture was refluxed four hours, cooled, and treated with water. The oil was extracted with 500 ml. ether, and the ethereal solution washed with water several times, and then dried with sodium sulfate. After removal of the ether, the residue was fractionated. At an oil bath temperature of 225 C., the main fraction passed over at 170 C./ 15 mm. The yield was 61 g., or 66% of the theory.

To 23 g. of the monododecyl ether of ethylene glycol and 8 ml. pyridine, there was gradually added, with cooling and stirring, 16 ml. thionyl chloride. The mixture was heated on an oil bath at 100-110 C. for two hours, with constant stirring. It was cooled, and excess thionyl chloride decomposed with water. The oil was extracted with 200 ml. ether, the ethereal solution washed with water, then with sodium bicarbonate solution, and again with water. The ether was distilled off, and the residue fractionated. The main fraction amounted to 17.4 g., B.P. 180 C./26 mm. (bath temperature 220 C.). Later it had been found that fractionation was unnecessary. The residue after the ether evaporation was satisfactory.

The dodecyloxyethyl chloride was converted into the sulfide thus: metallic sodium, 1.3 g., was dissolved in 60 ml. 3A alcohol, and to this was added 4 ml. of condensed methyl mercaptan and 12.4 g. of the chloride. The mixture was refluxed for 2 hours. Water was added, and the oil extracted with 200 ml. ether, the ether solution washed with water, and dried with sodium sulfate. Removal of the ether left a residue which was distilled, B.P. 140 C./ 1.00 mm. (bath temp. 200 C.). The yield of dodecyloxyethyl methyl sulfide was 12.1 g. This is a new compound.

The sulfide, 5.1 g., was added gradually to 12 ml. concentrated nitric acid. This was treated with ice and water, and the oil was extracted with 100 ml. chloroform. The chloroform solution was washed with water, sodium bicarbonate solution, again with water, and dried with anhydrous sodium sulfate. The solvent was evaporated in vacuum; towards the end, 25 ml. of n-hexane were added, and the evaporation continued. The yield of dodecyloxyethyl methyl sulfoxide was 5.0 g., M.P. 43 C.

Dodecyloxyethoxyethyl methyl sulfoxide, compound No. 6 in the table, was prepared by a procedure similar to that described for the dodecyloxyethyl methyl sulfoxide, according to the following equations:

C1ZH25BI' C12H25OCH2CH2OCH2CH2OH Na'Br C H OCH CH OCH CH OH+SOCl -=C H OCH CH OCHCH Cl+SO +HC1 C H OCH CH OCH CH Cl+NaSCH C1 2H2 C H OCH CH OCH CH SCH +2HNO =C H OCH CH0CH CH SOCH +2NO +H O The reaction product of monosodium diethylene glycol with dodecyl bromide represents the pure 100% adduct of lauryl alcohol with two moles of ethylene oxide H H+2ETO). The following two intermediates are new compounds:

iDodecyloxyethoxyethyl chloride,

C H 0CH CH 0CH CH Cl B.P. 150 C./1.5 mm. (oil bath temp. 210 C.) Dodecyloxyethoxyethyl methyl sulfide,

C H OCH CH OCH CH SCH B.P. 155 C./ 1.5 mm. (bath temp. 225 C.).

EXAMPLE 4 A powdered detergent composition containing the sulfoxides of this invention as a foam stabilizing additive was prepared to have the following composition.

Ingredient: Percent Sodium tetrapropylene benzene sulfonate 18.0 Sulfoxide 3.5 Sodium toluene sulfonate 2.5 Tetrasodium pyrophosphate 25.0 Pentasodium tripolyphosphate 15.0 Sodium silicate 6.0 Sodium carboxy methyl cellulose .5 Water 7.0

Sodium sulfate and miscellaneous ingredients 22.5

The following sul-foxides were separately evaluated in the above formula: dodecyl glycerol sulfoxide, dodecyloxyethyl methyl sulfoxide, dodecyloxyethoxyethyl methyl sulfoxide, dodecyl Z-mercaptomethylethyl sulfoxide and dodecyl acetonyl sulfoxide. The volume of foam produced in aqueous solutions of these compositions is equal or superior to that obtained using prior art foam stabilizers. In addition, the foam remains stable for a longer period of time than foams heretofore obtained.

What is claimed is: 1. Sulfoxides having the formula:

0 121125 (OCHzCHz) S -R wherein x is 0 when R is a monovalent radical selected from the group consisting of glyceryl, 2-chloroethyl, 2- iodoethyl, Z-mercaptomethyl ethyl, 2-methoxyethyl, 2- ethoxyethyl, and 2-allyloxyethyl, and x is an integer from 1 to 2 when R is methyl.

2. A sulfoxide according to claim 1 which is dodecyl glyceryl sulfoxide.

3. A sulfoxide according to claim 1 which is dodecyl 2-chloroethyl sulfoxide.

4. A sulfoxide according to claim 1 which is dodecyl 2-iodoethyl sulfoxide.

5. A sulfoxide according to claim 1 which is dodecyl 2-mercaptomethylethyl sulfoxide.

6. A sulfoxide according to claim 1 which is dodecyl 2-methoxyethyl sulfoxide.

7. A sulfoxide according to claim 1 which is dodecyl 2- ethoxyethyl sulfoxide.

8. A sulfoxide according to claim 1 which is dodecyl 2-allyloxyethyl sulfoxide.

9. A sulfoxide according to claim 1 which is dodecyloxyethyl methyl sulfoxide.

10. A sulfoxide according to claim 1 which is dodecyloxyethoxyethyl methyl sulfoxide.

References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 3,288,858 11/ 1966 Lyness et a1. 260607 FOREIGN PATENTS 581,343 1946 Great Britain 260607 OTHER REFERENCES Reppe et al.: Ann. (1956), vol. 601 (1956), pp. 111- 118.

ELBERT L. ROBERTS, Primary Examiner D. R. PHILLIPS, Assistant Examiner US. Cl. X.R. 

